Iguodala, Miller lead Sixers past Nets

PHILADELPHIA (Ticker) - The Philadelphia 76ers turned out to be
the team to rebound after a disappointing loss.

Andre Iguodala had a game-high 28 points to go along with seven
rebounds and five assists as the 76ers outlasted the New Jersey
Nets, 91-87, at the Wachovia Center on Saturday.

Andre Miller added 20 points and Louis Williams scored 15 for
Philadelphia, which defeated New Jersey for the first time in
three meetings this season.

Samuel Dalembert had 11 points, a game-high 18 rebounds and five
blocks for the Sixers (35-35), who are one-half game behind the
idle Toronto Raptors (35-34) for sixth place in the Eastern
Conference.

The Nets (29-41), on the other hand, are on the outside looking
in at the playoff race - 1 1/2 games behind the Atlanta Hawks
(30-39) for the eighth and final spot in the East.

Philadelphia was clinging to an 86-85 lead in the final minute
with New Jersey in possession. Nets center Josh Boone appeared
to have an easy look at the basket with 38 seconds left, but
Dalembert blocked his layup attempt.

"I blocked it with the left hand," Dalembert said. "I tipped
it, so the ball stayed in the air. We were able to go after the
rebound and push it (up court)."

Iguodala was fouled on the Sixers' next trip up court and hit
two free throws to make it 88-85 with 22.5 seconds left.

"As long as (Dalembert) continues to dominate the paint and let
guys know he's there (by) either making them miss a shot or
block a shot, it's gonna be a huge help to us," Iguodala said.

Vince Carter had a chance to tie it for the Nets but missed a
3-pointer from the right side with 17.9 left. Iguodala
responded with two more free throws to give Philadelphia a
five-point advantage.

"(Carter) is their go-to guy," Iguodala said. "Tonight, he did
a great job of just keeping them in the game. That's Vince
Carter. He's been doing it for the last nine years."

Carter then was allowed to go in for an uncontested dunk before
Miller hit a free throw for the final margin.

Philadelphia was coming off a 113-95 blowout loss at Orlando on
Friday, while New Jersey dropped a 123-114 home contest to
Denver on the same day.

"I thought after both teams (played Friday), it was going to be
a tough game for both teams," Sixers coach Maurice Cheeks said.
"It was just a game we had to grind out."

"Losing two in a row really hurts us right now," Carter said.
"(It) puts us in a hole. Every game is important."

The Sixers trailed by seven points to open the fourth quarter
when they went on a 10-2 run to go up, 78-77, after two free
throws by Williams with 8:30 left.

Williams later hit a jumper to give the Sixers the lead for good
at 81-80 with 6:30 left.

"I was just one of the guys that came off the bench and was able
to spark it," Williams said.

The Nets appeared to take command of the contest early in the
third quarter. After Iguodala opened the second half with an
alley-oop dunk to give the Sixers a 51-42 lead, New Jersey used
a well-balanced attack to go on a 24-7 run and take a 66-58 lead
with 4:10 remaining.

Carter had six points during the spurt and his dunk with 1:02
left in the third gave the Nets their largest lead at 75-66.
New Jersey led 75-68 after three quarters.

"We got down by nine and actually came back and won the game,
which shows a lot," Iguodala said.

"We had a real good third quarter," Nets coach Lawrence Frank
said. "Our zone seemed to disrupt them. Then, in the fourth
(quarter), their press really hurt us and things got switched.
The third quarter was ours, the fourth was theirs."

Neither team was able to establish control from the outset until
late in the first quarter. With the score tied at 19-19,
Dalembert and Miller scored to give Philadelphia a 23-19 lead
after one period.

It became an 11-4 run for the Sixers into the second quarter as
Williams hit a 3-pointer and later sank two free throws to give
Philadelphia a 30-23 advantage.

The Nets answered with a 9-2 burst of its own to tie the score,
32-32, when Marcus Williams capped the spurt with a 3-pointer.

However, Miller helped the 76ers regain control as he hit two
foul shots. Philadelphia outscored New Jersey, 17-7, down the
stretch to take a 49-42 lead at halftime. Miller led all
scorers with 14 first-half points.

Carter scored 27 points while Devin Harris and Nenad Krstic
added 14 apiece for the Nets. Richard Jefferson had 11 but made
just 3-of-15 shots from the field.

"I wouldn't say we fell apart, but we might have had a couple of
lapses," Jefferson said.